This blog covers the practical techniques, trials and tribulations associated with the transformation of IT systems from legacy technologies to systems using SOA and modern open systems. It also includes the occasional interlude with rants about technology in general.

Thursday, December 10, 2009

State Keeping/State Avoidance

Managing SOA complexity brings up the question of session state. By ’state’ I mean all the required information that must be maintained and stored across the series of interactions needed to complete a full business exchange. Maintaining the state of a service interaction implies remembering at what stage are the conversing partners and the working data in effect. It will often be at your discretion designing services to either depend more or less on the use of state information. At other times the problem at hand will force a specific avenue. In either case, you should remember this simple formula: State-Keeping = Complexity.

Maintaining state might be inescapable in automated orchestration logic, but it comes with a cost. State-Keeping constrains the options for maintaining high availability and indirectly may increase SOA’s fragility by making it more difficult to add redundant components to the environment. With redundant components you must ensure that messages flowing through the system maintain their state, regardless of the server resources used. Relying on session states, while also allowing flexible service flows, is hard to do. It’s done, yes, but the price you will have to pay is an increase complexity and performance penalties related to the need to propagate the state of a particular interaction across several nodes. Therefore, a key SOA tenet is that you should use sessionless flows whenever possible. In other words, every request should ideally be atomic and serviceable regardless of the occurrence of previous requests.

Do you want to know the name of an employee with a given social security number? No problem. As a part of the request pass the social security number, and receive the name. If you next want the employee’s address, you can pass either the social security number or the name as part of the request. While atomic, sessionless, requests such as these do impose a requirement that the client maintains the state of the interaction and holds the information elements related to the employee, this approach does simplify the design of systems using server clusters.

Still, while the preferred tenet is to avoid session keys. On occasion, it becomes impossible for the client to keep the state, forcing the server to assume this responsibility. In this case, the approach is to use a uniquely generated “session-id” whereby the server “remembers” the employee information (the state). You will have to ensure the session key and associated state data is accessible to all servers in a loosely-coupled cluster, making your system design more complicated.

For an example of keeping a session-based state, consider an air booking process where the client is reserving a pair of seats. The server will temporarily decrease the inventory for the flight. For the duration of the transaction the server will give a unique “reservation id” to the client so that any ongoing requests from the client can be associated with the holding of these seats. Clearly, such a process will need to include timeout logic to eventually release the two seats in the event the final booking does not take place before a predetermined amount of time.

This discussion leads to another tenet: maintaining state, either in the client or in the server, along the lines mentioned is ultimately acceptable. Keeping the state inside the intermediate nodes? Not so much. Why? An intermediate component should not have control in timing-out a resource that’s being held in the server. If it did, it would be disrupting the server’s ability to maintain integrity in its environment. Also, an intermediate component will not have full awareness of the business semantics of the service request/response. Relying on an intermediate component to preserve state is like expecting your mail carrier to remind you that your cable bill is due for payment on the 20th of each month. He might do it, yes, but the moment you forget to tip him during the holidays, he just might “forget”!

Ironically, many of today’s vendors offer solutions that encourage the processing of business logic in their intermediate infrastructure products, encouraging you to maintain state in these middleware components. They do so because enabling middleware is an area that does not require them to be aware of your applications, and thus is the easiest area for them to offer you a “value-add service” in a productized, commoditized fashion. You should resist the melodious chant of these mermaids and refrain from using their tempting extras services. If not, you may find yourself stuck with an inflexible design and with a dependency on specific vendor architecture to boot.

My advice is to avoid these vendor-enabled approaches. There is much that can get complicated with the maintenance of state, especially when the business process requires transactional integrity, referential integrity, and security (and most business processes do). The moment you give up this tenet and maintain session state inside the SOA middleware as opposed to the extreme end represented by the Client and the Server, you will be ensuring years of added complexity in the evolution of your SOA system.

IT Transformation with SOA

About Me

Israel has been recognized by Computerworld as one of their Premiere 100 IT honorees. Israel is a business and technology leader who has contributed the technology vision as key strategist and designer behind the enterprise technology roadmaps of large hospitality and travel companies. Israel has also have developed and deployed various mission-critical systems and in the process, he's been instrumental in creating and building effective and skilled development organizations.